Isyndus reticulatus Stål, 1868
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11865/zs.201835 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5458026 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AF87E3-FFC3-FFCC-FF4B-355E505CD3BA |
treatment provided by |
Diego |
scientific name |
Isyndus reticulatus Stål, 1868 |
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Isyndus reticulatus Stål, 1868 View in CoL ( Figs 1–14)
Isyndus heros Stål, 1858 View in CoL (nec Fabricius): 445.
Isyndus reticulatus Stål, 1868: 101 View in CoL ; Stål, 1874: 21; Lethierry & Severin, 1896: 187; Hoffmann, 1935: 145; China, 1940: 254; Hoffmann, 1944: 67; Hsiao & Ren, 1981: 495; Maldonado-Capriles, 1990: 221; Cai & Wang, 1998: 171.
Euagoras reticulatus: Walker, 1873: 121 .
Isyndus reticulatus reticulatus: Dispons, 1969: 71 View in CoL ; Putshkov & Putshkov, 1996: 242.
Coloration. Body dark brown to black. Most of anteocular portion, annulations on first antennal segment, basal half of second antennal segment, apices of third antennal segment, apical portion of fourth antennal segment, markings on pronotum, annulations on legs, markings on corium and connexiva orange to red brown ( Fig. 1).
Structure. Body large, covered by dense, yellowish, short, appressed setae, intermixed with long erect setae. Interocular sulcus broad, ocelli-bearing area of postocular slightly protruding. Anterior pronotal lobe with 1+1 processes bilaterally; posterior lobe with distinct transverse rugosities, humeri ending into an acute spine with an obtuse denticle posteriad of its base. Posterior pronotal angles prominent backwards, posterior margin slightly concave. Scutellum equilaterally triangular, with a strongly impressed “Y”-shaped ridged, its subapical portion ending into a small cone-shaped process ( Fig. 2 View Figures 2–14 ). Hemelytron of female slightly surpassing tip of abdomen, that of male extending distinctly beyond tip of abdomen. Fifth and sixth connexival segments significantly expanded, abdominal sternum with glabrous spots ( Figs 2–3 View Figures 2–14 ). Median process of pygophore prominent, biramous, each ramus faintly subdivided into an outer small process and an inner large one ( Figs 4–5 View Figures 2–14 ). Paramere club-shaped, curved, with long setae ( Figs 6–7 View Figures 2–14 ); apical portion of phallosoma slightly raised ( Fig. 8 View Figures 2–14 ); articulatory apparatus with basal plate and basal plate bridge thin, pedicel short ( Fig. 9 View Figures 2–14 ); dorsal phallothecal sclerite with two small elliptical processes ( Figs 10–11 View Figures 2–14 ); dorsal conjunctiva processes whip-like, bent, apically tapering ( Figs 12–14 View Figures 2–14 ); basal portion of ventral processes concealed beneath dorsal phallothecal sclerite when endosoma is partly uneverted, dorsal and lateral endosoma processes podgy, apically provided with three small processes ( Fig. 13 View Figures 2–14 ).
Measurements (♂ (n = 5)/ ♀ (n = 6)). Body length 18.40–20.10/23.40–25.50; maximum width of abdomen 4.64–5.01/ 7.87–8.97. Length of head 3.56–3.84/3.97–4.26; length of anteocular portion 1.40–1.49/1.70–1.99; length of postocular portion 1.51–1.60/1.64–1.80; length of interocellar space 1.09–1.23/1.27–1.46; length of synthlipsis 0.50–0.57/0.48–0.57; length of antennal segments I–IV= 6.83–8.22/7.94–9.94, 1.50–2.27/2.01–2.61, 5.36–7.84/6.94–7.86, 2.64–3.59/2.57–3.13; length of visible rostral segments I–III=1.73–1.93/1.71–2.37, 1.30–1.40/1.54–1.60, 0.48–0.71/0.71–0.73. Length of anterior pronotal lobe 1.44–2.14/1.76–2.11; length of posterior lobe 2.31–2.70/2.93–3.31; width of pronotum 5.21–5.71/6.84–7.40. Length of hemelytron 12.83–12.95/15.85–16.80.
Material examined. China, Yunnan, Mengla , 3♀ 5♂, 10. V.2009, leg. Hu Li ; China, Guangxi, Nanning , 1♀, 16. V.1982, leg. Fasheng Li ; China, Guangxi, Sanmeng , 1♀, 4. VI.1982, leg. Chi-kun Yang ; China, Guangdong, Shixing , 1♀, 20.IV.1991, leg. Fasheng Li.
Distribution. China (Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Sichuan, Guizhou, Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Yunnan, Hong Kong), India, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia.
Notes. This species is a common harpactorine reduviid in southern China and is also broadly distributed in the Oriental Region. Dispons (1969) synonymized I. pilosipes Reuter, 1881 and I. modestus Distant, 1919 with this species, but the validity of Dispons’ opinion is still debated (Cai & Wang, 1998).
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
VI |
Mykotektet, National Veterinary Institute |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Isyndus reticulatus Stål, 1868
Zhao, Yisheng, Song, Fan, Li, Hu & Cai, Wanzhi 2018 |
Isyndus reticulatus reticulatus:
Putshkov & Putshkov, V. G. 1996: 242 |
Dispons 1969: 71 |
Euagoras reticulatus:
Walker & Catalogue of the Specimens of Hemiptera Heteroptera in the Collection of the British Museum. Part VII & Britishi Museum & London 1873: 121 |
Isyndus reticulatus Stål, 1868: 101
Hoffmann & Catalogue of Reduviidae of China. Lingnan University Science Bulletin & No & Chanton 1944: 67 |
China 1940: 254 |
Hoffmann 1935: 145 |
Lethierry & Severin & Catalogue General des Hemipteres. Tome III & Heteropteres. R. & Friedlander & Fils & Berlin 1896: 187 |
Stal 1874: 21 |
Stal 1868: 101 |